At 6-foot-5, 230 pounds, Bortles, the third overall pick in the 2014 NFL Draft, has the look of a franchise signal caller. He has the makeup to move the pocket better than Henne for a Jedd Fisch system that needs a fast tempo to work efficiently.

That being said, the club’s commitment to Henne, who has been more than serviceable, means Bortles is not yet a practical fantasy QB2 on draft day.

His main weapons in the passing game are a gimpy Cecil Shorts (hamstring), who’s a third fantasy WR, and a pair of rookie catchers in Marqise Lee and Allen Robinson – talented in the long term but probably nothing more than occupants of a last fantasy bench spot.

It’s also doubtful Bortles will look this good when he’s facing NFL starters for extended periods of time.

Fantasy Takeaway

As long as Henne has the job, he’s merely a match-up play.

If you’re in a cavernous league and have a pick to spare for a high-upside project, Bortles is not a bad stash. But you’re not going to be considering him in standard games until inseason pickup runs.

What this means for daily fantasy

With a Week 1 price of $5,300, Shorts could be a FantasyScore value play against the Philadelphia Eagles, but it’s not a huge discount. Bold FS players could try Henne ($4,900) against one of 2013’s worst pass defenses, but other midrange values are more attractive.